I don't think that link is there. If you want to control Canadian content, that's fine. You can do it with regulations on the broadcaster, which you have already in place, or you can do it on a telco that is providing Internet protocol-based television. You can put the same restrictions on them if you wish.
You're certainly not in a position to control content on the Internet, and I think no one does that. But if you want to control programmed television—whether it's provided free to air, on cable networks, or on high-speed Internet networks—you can do that directly with regulations, many of which you have in place already, without necessarily going all the way back to the network and restricting investment in the network. I find that totally unnecessary.